Energy Never Dies

Episode 5: Possibilities of a Non-Linear Life - Special Guest: Zach Worthington

July 04, 2019 Tamara Gillespie and Hanna Kohfeld Season 1 Episode 5
Episode 5: Possibilities of a Non-Linear Life - Special Guest: Zach Worthington
Energy Never Dies
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Energy Never Dies
Episode 5: Possibilities of a Non-Linear Life - Special Guest: Zach Worthington
Jul 04, 2019 Season 1 Episode 5
Tamara Gillespie and Hanna Kohfeld

This episode was recorded with Hanna in Vietnam, Tamara in Kansas City and Zach in San Fransico - across the world and the U.S. they connected on a subject that we all seem to struggle with, work-life balance. 

Zach Worthington is a dear friend of Hanna’s. He is a stellar human and has an impressive resume to boot. He is an expert in his field of recruiting and has worked for companies like Google, Ibotta, BWBacon and Facebook. 

Zach is a millennial that has been thinking a lot about this concept - “The master of life makes little distinction between work and play”. They dive into what that means and why he feels his generation has a tendency to chase the next best thing without being grateful for what they have. Is this longing for something new or better a generational thing or just a human thing?

He introduces a bucket analogy to the girls, which they empty and fill throughout their conversation. Hanna can’t help but sprinkles in some Zen concepts and by the end of their chat, they are all rolling in laughter. 


Show Notes

This episode was recorded with Hanna in Vietnam, Tamara in Kansas City and Zach in San Fransico - across the world and the U.S. they connected on a subject that we all seem to struggle with, work-life balance. 

Zach Worthington is a dear friend of Hanna’s. He is a stellar human and has an impressive resume to boot. He is an expert in his field of recruiting and has worked for companies like Google, Ibotta, BWBacon and Facebook. 

Zach is a millennial that has been thinking a lot about this concept - “The master of life makes little distinction between work and play”. They dive into what that means and why he feels his generation has a tendency to chase the next best thing without being grateful for what they have. Is this longing for something new or better a generational thing or just a human thing?

He introduces a bucket analogy to the girls, which they empty and fill throughout their conversation. Hanna can’t help but sprinkles in some Zen concepts and by the end of their chat, they are all rolling in laughter.